Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 1, 1938)
PAUL DEUTSCHMANN, Editor HAL HAENER, Manage! BILL PENGRA, Managing Editor Associate Editor: Lloyd Tupling Upper News Staff Bud Jermain, News Editor Elbert Hawkins, Sports Editoi Lyle Nelson, Asst. Managing Ed. Bernadine Bowman, Women’s Ed Advertising Staff this issue: Keith Osborne, Asst. Mgr. Dick Litfin, Day Mgr. Majeanne Glover, Asst. Martin Luther Milt Weiner Three Cheers for the Rally Committee JT WAS mammoth. Wo mean llio rally last night. Tlio torches flickered, 1 lie band blasted, visit in" notables bowed, and spoke, and upon every possible excuse the crowd burst forth into resounding cheers, not to mention almost effectively blocking Thirteenth street. And the dance afterward was just as good. The program radiated with vitality, the dancers were unrestrainable in their “jittering.’’ And (lerlinger hall rocked in its best rally dance manner as Webfoots cheered. « * # *■ rJMIE ENTIRE evening bespoke careful organization, and indicated enlhusastie work upon the part of the newly appointed rally committee. While it is indeed early in the season 1o begin handing out plaudits to the usually bedeviled rally committee, it seems that ASI’O Proxy Weston lias picked a dozen winners. It must be admitted, however, that a great deal of credit goes to the entire student body. Without the hearty enthus iasm that marked last night ’s blowout, even the most efficient planning would have been to no avail. # # # * ■yyE HAVE one criticism to make in closing. With all the yelling that went on a lot of people will probably bo hoarse to start with tit the game this afternoon. Round n' About WITH WEN BROOKS Even a would-be columnist has his troubles . . . yes, girls, or rather, a girl. Here I think I’ll write a nice, wholesome col umn and what happens? The editor . . . pardon his highness . . , informs me there’ll be a girl columnist this year again . . . the bane of all newspaper men . . . and the girl’s going to devote her strip to scandal and . . . well, who’ll read my stuff now ? Now I ask you, should I snoop to conquer, too ? Be just another Winchell? No! A thou sand times, NO! Still, gotta ad mit I like a little guppy my self, now and then ... as long as it’s good, clean dirt. So, my friends (apologies to Roosevelt), I'll carry on and wish the curb cruising cutie (AR) all the worst of the worst and know she'll do well with her column if she gets it! sjs s|s lie Enough of that. Understand n certain Alpha 1’lii pledge will ho oil Iho proverbial spot this afternoon. Her brother attends UCLA. Her cousin will he help ing the rest of the Webfoot team can the Uclans. Wonders who to cheer for. Would sug gest the luillraee for eases of doubt such as this. * * Speaking of the pigskin sport: Ralph Goodrich, manager of the Duck Inn, is giving away two meal tickets after each varsity game to (1) the Oregon player scoring the first touchdown, (2) the fellow blocking the first kick. Frank Emmons and Vie Reginato “cashed in” as a re sult of the Pullman trip. * * * Yesterday was a big day at the Gamma Phi sorority and Sigma ('Id fraternity. Mrs. W il liam Helm, international presi dent of Ganunu Phi lteta passed through lEugene on her way home to Seattle, had lunch wit it IlillHIIIlll iiiimniiii MBill Running a Want Ad Every Week Is Sure to Bring Unusual Results Lot s of Good Timely customers Sales <is well ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ P OREGON DAILY J EMERALD « L» Phone 3300 the girls on Hilyard street. Mrs. I)ehn hail just come from Los Angeles, where she helped at installation ceremonies for a chapter of Gamma Phi Beta on the Southern Cal campus. Local Sigma Chis and several state alumni honored I.. G. Balfour, Grand Council of Sigma Chi, at dinner last night. Candid eight: three girls from one of the millrace sororities scampering down Eleventh bare footed' just after the cloudburst Wednesday night. And word comes that Edison Marshall, one-time member of Tabbard Inn on the campus and pupil of W. E. G. Thacher, will be on the campus Homecoming week-end. Marshall at present is one of the better-known writers of popular fiction, has stories regularly in Good House keeping and Cosmopolitan. - » j wu ixvvvit t tuv.au^ heard: ATO’s Wally Rossman listened to his own wedding bells this summer. Understand “Mrs. Rossman" doesn't mind, however, if Wally "dates” oc casionally with coeds on the campus. Where’s another girl like that? Ami did you know that Wally has a print-o-sign outfit tucked away up in the Igloo? Makes money in his spare moments doing signs for local merchants, campus agents, et al. * * * Chief gripe of the moment: that union restrictions are such that Muurrie Itinford's band can no longer play at student body assemblies. That is, with out charging the AStJO for a paid performance. Hear Fred Jieardsley is organizing Ids own campus hand. Fred sang with Art Holman last year. Holman's outfit played for us last night at tlie rally dance. * * * Question: Where on the cam pus does tlie Oregon seal ap pear face-down ? Answer: On the skylight above the second floor of John son. * * * And it's been business on a big scale at the Co-op this past week with twenty extra stu dents on the payroll. Three stu dents are kept busy through the school year as part of the regular staff. * * * Finally, how many of you have on the tip of your tongue, even know . . . the first name of Oregon’s held football couch? Sure lie’s called “Tex,” hailing from Texas. Asked several mem bers of the squad, the dean of men, and other notables on the campus and no one knew Oli ver's first name. Well, folks, it’s Gerald . . . G. A. "Tex" Oli ver, who graduated from South ern Cal in 11)80. And that's about thirty for now. Wie geht’s iiiiiiiiiimiiiiiimiinniimiiimiiiiiiiiiiraiiinniiiuromiiinimiiiiiiuiiHiintiii By V. GATES The week’s best wit: the fel low who thought the Kellogg Pact was something you got in a package of corn flakes. $ $ * The European tangle, at times, assumes the aspect of po liticomics. If they can make it synchronize with technicolor Walt Disney might use it for a Silly Symphony. Personally we'd like it without sound effects. «■• « * It occurs to us in a moment of practical rationalization that the whole thing would he simp ler if they’d shorten the name of Czechoslovakia instead of the boundaries. * * * The propagandists made a sorry move if they expect to interest this country in a war just as the football season gets started. From now on we’ll take notice of coup d’ etats only from Monday morning to Fri day noon. With time off on Wednesdays to lay our bets on Saturday’s games. # * a: Names make news on the UCLA football team. Joe E. grown, the movie comedian, has a son playing end. We will re frain from mentioning the pos sibility of his catching passes with his mouth. * $ *■ And two colored boys named Ken George Washington and Woodrow Wilson Strode are a sure-fire passing combination. Presidential loyalty is one thing but politics another. Tex Oliver threatens a third party move for Saturday. Religious Leaders (Continued from paye one) the leaders will be available for personal interviews. Students wish ing to see any members of the team sholuld call Bettylou Swart at 772 or at the YW Bungalow. Campus offices will be main tained for each leader. Miss Wygal and Miss Frances P. Greenough will use the YW Bungalow; and Mr. Bader the YM Hut. Dr. Bal lard and J. Maxwell Adams will be at Westminster House; and Dr Bollinger at Wesley House. Dr. Jones and Dr. Koo may be (found in the men’s lounge; and Mrs. Overton and Howard Thur man in Alumni hall. Webfoot Crew (Continued from paye one) others. An added feature of the rally and one that will give a special importance to today’s clash was the initial appearance of the ASUO band in their new' uniforms, under the direction of John Stehn, who announced a 60-member band for this year. Outstanding in the evening was the prolonged cheering that greet ed Oregon’s mentor, Coach Oliver, upon his introduction to the crowd, which showed that ASUO efforts to give Oregon that “new spirit" to back its team and its coach have not been in vain. British Woman (Continued from page one) associated with the co-operative movement in Great Britain, an organization which now carries on a third of its retail wholesale trade and which accounts for the large stake in the enterprise of the com monwealth possessed by its eight million members. As a result of this movement, the great trade un ion groups are not only employees, but employers also in their capac ity as shareholders in the Roch dale co-operatives. Miss Bondfield, who is on a lec ture tour of the northwest, is staying at the Co-ed Co-operative House in Eugene, during her two days stay on the campus. NEW II. A. ASSISTANTS Graduate assistants in the school of business administration are Paul Haynian, who was at the Univer sity of Oregon in that position last year; Glen M'cW'aniel. who took his undergraduate work at the Univer sity of North Dakota; and Charles E. Kasor, who graduated from Ohio University. ■ ■ ■ ;■ ■ ■ ■ ■■ Victor Blue Bird Decca All the late records here ■ * » WILSON 1 ■ MUSIC HOUSE ■ ■ 39 E. 10th Phone “ “ W. F. G. Thacher Tells \ Of European Situation W. F. G. Thacher, professor of advertising declared recently on his return from a three-month tour of Europe, that, “All is not what it seems in Europe." In Italy and Germany the people appear busy and prosperous with none of the desperate, unhappy attitude that we hear so much about, j Music School Adds Four Instructors The University of Oregon school of music opens the fall season well equipped with four new faculty members, it was recently an nounced, three of whom are for mer students at the University of Oregon. Dorothy Louise Johnson attained ! musical popularity as a student here with her numerous concert 1 appearances with her violin. She has been given the job of assistant in the string department, and will specialize in the teaching of chil dren. In the department of woodwinds, a newcomer on the faculty is Mayo Soenson, flutist. He, too, has given some splendid campus perform ances, and has also done profes ! sional work in music. Margaret Allen, who for three i years has been playing the oboe professionally, and is a former stu dent of Seattle’s famous Whitney Tustin, is another faculty addi tion. She has been first oboist with the Los Angeles women’s sym phony orchestra, and has per formed with the orchestra at Santa Ana, California. Another former student of the University of Oregon, and now a member of the music faculty, is Allen Templar, who will teach trombone. NEW B. A. LIBRARIAN The new librarian in the school of business administration is Miss Myrna Barrett, who is working for her masters degree in history at the University of Oregon. Miss Barrett is taking the place of Mrs. Marjorie Reynolds, for merly business administration li brasian ,who is acting as reserve librarian in the main library dur ing the absence of Willis Warren. i - FIRST OPEN HOUSE Westminster house’s first open house of the year will be held to night from 8 to 11:30, and will con ; tinue to be a regular Friday night feature from now on. Harold Draper is in charge of the evening’s en tertainment, the highlights of which are a program, games, and dancing. Westminster’s hostess, Mrs. Jim Bryant, invites everyone to attend. xiiauuei saiu. Axie people, nuw- ^ ever, reflect an attitude of “too ( much military” in these countries, 1 ; although when asked about war, they express a belief that there will be no such crisis, he explained. Mrs. Thacher, who accompanied him on the trip, visited friends in Vienna where she studied piano before teaching at the University. Conversations with Viennese con vinced Thacher that the majority of people welcomed Hitler and Nazi changes. They accept Hitler with reserva tions, he stated. Most of them feel he has been too harsh with the Jewish people. “I went over there with strong feelings about Hitler, but when I came back — although I do not justify his means—I feel he has done a great deal for these eople and my feelings about the situa tion are different,” Thacher said. Webfoot Crew (Continued from patje one) second hurdle, the game this aft-; ernoon. Oliver was there with his hefty right-hand man, Bill Cole. Both i appeared on the program. So did j UCLA representatives. Yells played the usual prominent part. An un usual feature of the yells was the punch put into a California yell directed by one of the yell lead ers from the south. Baton-twirling deluxe was dem onstrated by John Stehn’s find, Les Harger, Sigma Chi transfer from Sacramento junior college. Harger went through a baton rou tine in the darkened hall with lighted torches at each end of the long baton he used. E. Stanley Jones (Continued from pacje one) Leaders to Speak Three other mission leaders will speak in downtown churches at the j 11 o’clock services and will meet with young peoples’ groups at 5 o’clock. T. Z. Koo, Shanghai, will be at the First Methodist Episcopal church; Jesse M. Bader, national director Of the mission, at the First Christian church, and Miss Winfred Wygal, national secretary student division YWCA, at the Bethany Evangelical church. Dr. Bader will meet with the First Introducing E. Stanley Jones One of the world’s most famous preachers” people have called this nan who will open the University Christian Mission tomorrow eve iing at McArthur Court. Although le has not been on the campus be ore, many will remember his ad iresses at the Preaching Mission in Portland two years ago. As with Gandhi, whose friend le is, mention of Dr. Jones’ name neans talking about India, for he las spent more than 30 years in missionary service there. He is constantly in demand as a speaker and leader of round ta bles and forums by adults and y'oung people. Besides his work in India, Dr. Jones has visited con ferences in South America, China, Korea, Malaya, Burma, South Af rica, Australia and • the United States. . He has published seven best sellers of modern religious litera ture. Over one million copies in English, and thousands of copies, translated into 20 other languages, have been sold. Dr. Jones will also speak at as sembly at Gerlinger hall Friday at 11 o’clock. Christian young people and Miss Wygal with the First Baptist young people at 5 o’clock. Dr. Koo will bb guest of Delta Tau Delta and Miss Wygal of Sigma Chi for Sunday dinner. A Dormitory Not Eden for Cats Girls Learn Three blissfully ignorant freshman girls spent the night of September 25, entertaining % Adam and Eve in the privacy £ of their boudoir. Their distinguished guests an nounced they were hungry and * sent two of the girls speeding , to the nearby store for a half 1 pint of milk and five cents worth of hamburger. At eleven o'clock, by way of a chair lowered from their first floor study-room window, they obtained a box of garden soil, and then seeing that their guests were “set” for the night. They retired. After an unexpected room in5 spection the following morning they learned of prevailing rules which excluded all pets, (even little black and white kittens) from dormitory rooms. They mournfully fed Adam and Eve for the last time and (again by way of the lowered chair) re leased their pets to the cold, cruel worfd. MISS POPE LEAVES Miss Ida M. Pope, secretary of the teacher placement service, left this morning on an annual month’s vacation, which she will spend at Coronado, California. CAMPUS CALENDAR Girls’ hookey turnouts will be eld Monday afternoon at 4 ’clock in Gerlinger hall. All girls /ho are interested are urged to ttend the meeting. Theta Sigma Phi, women’s jour lalistlc honorary, will meet Tues iay at 7 p.m. in room 105, Jour lalism. All members and spring erm pledges are requested to be here. Westminster House on Sunday: ):45, Morning Group with Bob Xnox; G:00, Social Hour; 6:30, Forum, Dr. J. Hudson Ballard leading. Intramural Sports Curtain Rises Soon Today is the last opportunity graduates will have to register without paying a late registration fine, according to Clifford K. Stals berg, University cashier. CLARK WRITES HISTORY Collier’s Publishing company has requested Dr. R. C. Clark, head of the history department, to write a historical and descriptive article of Oregon for the National Encyclo pedia year book, which will come out in 1939, covering the events of the past year. -1 " • Room and Board FOR MEN. Wholesome home cook ing. Furnace heat. 1598 Or chard. Phone 3715-W. # # * IDEAL location. One block from Johnson hall. $29.50 per month. 1315 E. 13th. FOR 2 GIRLS. $20 a mo. ea. 2021 Villard. 2435-J. • Rooms HOME-LIKE rooms for girls near campus. Phone 2539. ADJOINING campus. Sleeping rooms for students. Good beds. Inquire 754 E. 14th. Phone 3615-J. * Barber Shops WHY WALK a mile for a haircut when you can get the best for 35c at Joe Prairie’s shop. 11th and Alder. BETTER SERVICE for students at the Eugene Hotel Barber Shop. Ladies’ haircutting a specialty. * Radio Repairs MOVING!! Economy Radio Lab is moving to 678 E. 11th by the Mayflower theater on Novem ber 1. * Used Cars ORMISTON MOTOR CO. should be your headquarters for used cars. Come see our bargains. 873 Pearl. • Expert Plumbing CHASE COMPANY PLUMBERS. Repairs and installations of all kinds. Servicemen always ready. Phone 243. Inquire 936 Oak. * For Sale. ROYAL typewriter in good shape. $25.00. Phone 3292-J • Lost SHEAFFER fountain pen, burnt orange color. Lost Wednesday near libe. Name Eva Gadway, Alpha Gamma Delta. # Wanted SIDE CURTAINS for model-A Ford roadster. Call 2800 and leave message. Straight to more pleasure . . . that's where Chesterfield makes a solid hit every time .. . gives smokers what they want .. . refreshing mildness and better taste and here’s the big reason. . . It takes good things to make a good prod uct. That’s why we use the best ingredi ents a cigarette can have... mild ripe to baccos and pure cigarette paper... to make Chesterfield the cigarette that SA TISFIES. Iflfi ' "v 4'Jv ' O' : * ~ Y ° is®;: • . , .... ..VvLiiKSiNa*" Chesterfield ..more pleasure for millions w ¥ Paul Whiteman Every Wednesday Evening George Gracie Burns Allen Every Friday Evening All C. B. S. Stations Eddie Dooley Football Highlights Every Thursday and Saturday S2 Leading .V. B. C. Stations Copyright i$38, Liccftt 9c Myfrs Tomcco Co,